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Memphis Symphony Orchestra's New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home


Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home


Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home


Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home


Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home


Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home


Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings
FREE and open to the public
7:30-10:00pm
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 and
1:30-4:00PM
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Clark Opera Memphis Center
6745 Wolf River Parkway
Memphis, TN 38120

earshot home

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Four Emerging Composers Heard in Memphis Symphony Orchestra's New Music Readings
May 20-21, 2009 The Clark Opera Memphis Center


Memphis
Symphony Orchestra and EarShot, the newly formed National Orchestral
Composition Discovery Network, presented the works of four selected
composers in the Memphis Symphony Orchestra New Music Readings held on
May 20 and 21, 2009, in Memphis, TN. The Readings, conducted by David
Loebel, were an outstanding artistic and professional-development
opportunity for emerging composers and gave the selected composers
wider visibility in the field of orchestral music. The four composers
were Jean Ahn, Christian Baldini,
Patricio Da Silva, and Andreia Pinto-Correia.
The
Memphis Symphony Orchestra was organized in 1952 and is well
established as the Mid South's largest performing arts organization.
The MSO presents a 39-week season of Masterworks, Pops, and Chamber
subscription concerts. Historic collaborations with other arts agencies
and organizations allow the MSO to serve diverse regional audiences.
Having recieved numerous ASCAP awards for adventerous programming,
MSO's mission is to create meaningful experiences through music, and
its vision is to artistically engage. MSO artists are vital members of
the Memphis community, providing rich musical experiences for all ages.
The
Memphis Symphony New Music Readings are a part of EarShot: the
nationwide network of new music readings and related
composer-development programs. The goals of the program are to create
the nation’s first ongoing systematic program for identifying emerging
orchestral composers; to provide professional-level working experience
with orchestras from every region of the country; and to increase
awareness of these composers and access to their music throughout the
industry. EarShot is a partnership between American Composers
Orchestra, American Composers Forum, American Music Center, the League
of American Orchestras, and Meet The Composer.
Jean Ahn:
Salt
Born in Korea, Jean Ahn
began to study piano and composition at a very early age. She finished
her B.A. and M.M. at Seoul National University under professor Baek
Byoung Dong and received a Ph.D. in 2008 from UC Berkeley, where her
teachers included Edmund Campion, Cindy Cox, David Wessel, Jorge
Liederman, and Richard Felciano.
Her
creative output includes works ranging from solo instruments to full
orchestra, as well as choral, dance, and electroacoustic music. Recent
awards for her compositions include First Prize from the Renee Fisher
Award and Competition, the Korean National Music Composers Award, First
Prize from the Sejong Korean Music Competition, UC Berkeley's the De
Lorenzo Prize, and the Pan Music Festival Award. Ahn's music was
featured at Aspen Music Festival (Susan and Ford Schumann Composition
Fellow), June in Buffalo, the Oregon Bach Festival, Music 07, SCI
conferences, IAWM Beijing Congress, the Spark Festival, the Fresno New
Music Festival, University of Central Missouri New Music Festival, New
York City Electronic Music Festival, IAWM Festivals, among others. Her
work has been performed by Ensemble Sur Plus, pianist Lisa Moore (Bang
on a Can), pianist Shannon Wettstein (Zeitgeist), Berkeley Contemporary
Players and others. She is currently a Lecturer at UC.Berkeley and
lives in the Bay Area with her husband and two young children.
Salt
was premiered by the UC Berkeley's University Symphony, under the baton
of David Milnes in May 2008. The composer says of the piece, "Salt
began its life in 2005, when I found myself driven by a chord of six
notes.... In short, I experimented with all the possibilities opened up
by this one chord. The idea of transforming a single chord without
losing its fundamentals, combined with the sparkling image of the
ornaments, reminded me of the properties of salt. Thus was born the
title of the composition. Just as salt preserves its taste no matter
what it is mixed with, the essence of the original chord of the piece
is not lost throughout the entire work. In order to enhance the
metaphor, the electronics used in the piece-built on the resonance
model of the main chord with spectral transformation-employ the actual
sound of dropping, spreading and touching salt. Finally, the title Salt
also reflects my Christian faith and my musing on the words 'Ye are the
salt of the earth.' Thus the piece has the touch, taste and also the
meaning of salt."

Christian Baldini: elapsing twilight shades
Christian Baldini's
work as a conductor and composer has gathered recognition in several
International Competitions around the world (South Korea, USA, Brazil,
Argentina-UNESCO). His music has been performed in festivals and venues
throughout Europe, South America, North America and Asia by orchestras
and ensembles including the Southbank Sinfonia (London), New York New
Music Ensemble, Daegu Chamber Orchestra (South Korea), Orchestre
National de Lorraine (France), Chronophonie Ensemble (Freiburg), the
American Brass Quintet, the Barton Workshop (Amsterdam), the National
Polyphonic Choir of Argentina, the New York Virtuoso Singers, the
Kreisler Ensemble (London) and the Illegal Harmony Ensemble (Scotland).
Christian is currently the Music Director and Conductor of the Symphony
Orchestra at the State University of New York at Buffalo. He regularly
guest conducts in South America, England (Aldeburgh Festival) and the
USA. Most recently he was invited by Leonard Slatkin to conduct the
National Symphony Orchestra (Washington, DC). This summer he will be
conducting the Royal Scottish National Orchestra working with Martyn
Brabbins, and will be a featured composer and conductor in Edenkoben
(Germany). In the Fall 2009, Christian will begin his appointment as
the director of orchestras at the University of California at Davis.
elapsing twilight shades reflects
my particular interest in creating sonic structures that behave in a
quasi cubist fashion. In fact, listening to the piece is a bit like
looking at an abstract painting. One idea is presented from several
different perspectives. The "space" around the idea is manipulated,
folded and viewed as if through a kaleidoscope, repeated by many
different lenses. This is the starting point for a work that gradually
becomes inflected by a few humorous moments and a delight in symphonic
tradition. There are two main critical arrivals in the piece, where the
previous music is expanded into a more rhapsodic and quite different
dimension. For me these moments represent a special ideal of collective
beauty, achieved only through hope and freedom.
Patrício da Silva: Three Pieces for Orchestra
Patrício da Silva
(b. 1973) received formal musical training at the Escola Superior de
Música de Lisboa where he studied piano with Jorge Moyano and
composition with António Pinho Vargas (B.M. in piano, 1995). He then
pursued his composition studies in the US, first as a recipient of the
Betty Freeman Foundation Scholarship in Composition with Morton
Subotnick, Stephen L. Mosko, and Mel Powell at the California Institute
of the Arts (MFA, 1999), and later, with support from the Fundação
Luso-Americana para o Desenvolvimento (Portugal), he completed the
Ph.D. program in composition at the University of California (2003),
having studied composition with William Kraft, computer music with
Curtis Roads, and algorithmic composition and music with Artificial
Intelligence with David Cope.
Further studies include work with
Michael Gandolfi, John Harbison, Sydney Hodkinson, Augusta Read Thomas,
Bernard Rands, Helmut Lachenman, and Karlheinz Stockhausen. His
post-doctoral work as invited researcher at IRCAM in France was
followed in the UK by a research grant for computer music by the
Portuguese Foundation of Science and Technology. Awards include the
International Barto Prize, the Gould Family Foundation Composers Award,
the Ojai Festival Music for Tomorrow, the Otto Eckstein Family
Fellowship, the Susan and Ford Schumann Fellowship, and residencies at
the MacDowell Colony and the Atlantic Center for the Arts. His music
has been recently heard at Tanglewood, Ojai Music Festival, Aspen, Ruhr
Festival, Schleswig Holstein Music Festival, Historische Stadthalle
Wuppertal, Bayer Erholungshaus, London Festival of American Music,
Piano Spheres, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Zipper
Hall, Cistermúsica, International Music Festival Póvoa do Varzim,
Yamaha's YASI, SCRIME, and Los Angeles Sonic Odyssey. A new CD,
Hyper-Counterpointt, is scheduled for release in May of 2009.
Andreia Pinto-Correia:
Acanto
Born in Lisbon, Portugal, Andreia Pinto-Correia
is currently pursuing a composition doctoral degree at the New England
Conservatory, studying with Michael Gandolfi, after having received her
Master's degree there as student of Bob Brookmeyer. She started her
musical studies in Lisbon at the Academia de Amadores de Música.
Originally a performer, she dedicated herself to composition in 2002,
after being unable to perform due to an accident.
Recent recognitions include a 2009 Tanglewood Music Center Fellowship,
the 2009 NEC Contemporary Ensemble Composition Award, the 2008 Toru
Takemitsu Award by the Japan Society, a 2008 Composers Conference
Fellowship, a 2008 Orquestra do Algarve Young Composer Fellowship, a
2008 NEC Merit Award, a 2008/9 Luso-American Foundation Scholarship,
and a 2008 ASCAPLUS Award, among others.
Acanto
is an architectonic ornamentation inspired by the leaves of a plant
native to Mediterranean humid climates (acanthus mollis). In Portuguese
or Spanish language it may also be written as a canto meaning as in 'to
sing'. The idea for this piece derives from the manipulation of a
simple melodic cell, an ornament that travels through the work
appearing in different instruments or combination of instruments,
registers, and pitch/rhythmic mutations. Thus, the three movements
represent varied textural realizations of the same ornament. Sometimes
I use particular features of a movement across movement boundaries,
resulting in an organic use of the concept of memory and anticipation.
The third and last movement, Adagio molto, is modeled after the third
movement of Three Places in New England by Charles Ives. Here, the use
of ornamentation is expanded to form a simple lullaby played by the
vibraphone while the rest of the orchestra plays transformations,
mainly textural, of my original cell.

David Loebel,
conductor
David Loebel
has been Music Director and Conductor of the Memphis Symphony Orchestra
for the past ten years. Prior to his appointment in Memphis, he enjoyed
a decade-long association with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra,
serving as Associate and then Associate Principal Conductor, as well as
Artistic Director of its summer festival, Classics in the Loop.
As a guest conductor, David Loebel has appeared with the Philadelphia
Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony
Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, Saint Paul
Chamber Orchestra, Seattle Symphony Orchestra, and Brooklyn
Philharmonic Orchestra. He has also conducted the symphony orchestras
of Baltimore, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, New Jersey, and Syracuse, the
North Carolina Symphony, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the
Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, the Kansas City Symphony, the
Louisville Orchestra, Symphony Silicon Valley, the Louisiana
Philharmonic Orchestra and the Calgary Philharmonic, among many others.
Internationally, Maestro Loebel made his debut in Japan with the Tokyo
Philharmonic Orchestra and toured Australia to great acclaim, leading
the Sydney, Adelaide, Queensland, Western Australian, and Tasmanian
Symphony Orchestras. He has led family and educational concerts at
Carnegie Hall with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, the Saint Louis
Symphony Orchestra and the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra. Operatic
engagements include productions at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis and
Opera Memphis and he has appeared at summer festivals including the
Grant Park Music Festival, Eastern Music Festival, and Woodstock Mozart
Festival.
Active in the training of young musicians, Maestro Loebel has been
Conductor-in-Residence of the New World Symphony and Music Director of
the Saint Louis Symphony Youth Orchestra. He has also conducted the
Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the National Repertory Orchestra, and at
conservatories including The Juilliard School, New England
Conservatory, Cleveland Institute of Music, San Francisco Conservatory
of Music, and Indiana University. As a mentor to conductors, he has
served on the faculties of the League of American Orchestras’
Conducting Workshop, the Kennedy Center’s National Conducting
Institute, and the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of
Music.
Prior to joining the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Loebel served as
Assistant and then Associate Conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra. A native of Cleveland, he is a graduate of Northwestern
University, which in 2000 honored him with an Alumni Merit Award.

Tickets
& Info
The Memphis Symphony Orchestra Readings Sessions were held at The Clark
Opera Memphis Center, 6745 Wolf River Parkway in Memphis and were free
and open to the public. The Wednesday, May 20 readings was held from
7:30 to 10:00PM and the Thursday, May 21 readings were held from 1:30
to 4:00PM.
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